Final answer:
Using the conservation of momentum, the velocity of the cars just after an inelastic collision where a 1060-kg car moving west at 16 m/s collides with and locks onto a 1830-kg stationary car, is calculated to be approximately 5.87 m/s west.
Step-by-step explanation:
To determine the velocity of the cars just after the collision, we can use the principle of conservation of momentum. Since the cars lock together after the collision, it is an inelastic collision, and momentum is conserved. The total momentum before the collision must equal the total momentum after the collision.
We have:
Mass of car 1 (m1): 1060 kg
Velocity of car 1 (v1): 16 m/s west
Mass of car 2 (m2): 1830 kg (stationary)
Velocity of car 2 (v2): 0 m/s
The combined mass after the collision is m1 + m2.
The momentum before the collision for car 1 is m1 × v1.
Since momentum is conserved:(m1 × v1) + (m2 × v2) = (m1 + m2) × velocity after collision
Plugging in the values: 1060 kg × 16 m/s + 1830 kg × 0 m/s = (1060 kg + 1830 kg) × velocity after collision
16960 kg·m/s = 2890 kg × velocity after collision
The velocity after the collision is: 16960 kg·m/s / 2890 kg ≈ 5.87 m/s west